Why parrot moms get to wear bright colors

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LiveScience: In the animal kingdom, males typically get the showy colors — but scientists say a different kind of evolutionary logic gives the fashion edge to female parrots.
Male parrots of the species E. roratus have run-of-the-mill green feathers, while the females sport bright reds and blues. The birds look so different that they were initially thought to be different species.
Male parrots of the species E. roratus have run-of-the-mill green feathers, while the females sport bright reds and blues. The birds look so different that they were initially thought to be different species.Hans & Judy Beste Transparencies

In the animal kingdom, males typically get all the color, which they flaunt in the never-ending quest for sex.

Males use color, size, antlers and other showy tactics to discourage males (or in some cases, to beat them up).

Now and then, the reverse is true.

Usually when females are the most colorful, however, it's because sex roles have been reversed: The females are competing for mates and the males are tending the young.

So the parrot Eclectus roratus has been an enigma. The females stay in the nest while the males forage — a typical avian family setup. Females are well outnumbered, so they don't have to show off to get a mate.

Yet while the males are plain tree-leaf green, the females stand out like Fourth of July fireworks, brightly adorned with red and blue.

Mom and Dad are so different that when scientists first found them in the Australian rainforest, they though it was two different species.

A new study suggests an evolutionary logic for the odd coloring.

Bird's-eye view of birds
Australian National University researcher Robert Heinsohn and colleagues looked at the birds through avian eyes. Birds see color differently. Correcting for this was an eye-opener.

The male E. roratus roams widely in search of food. His simple green makes him hard to see against the forest's leaves, protecting him from predators. But against a tree trunk back home, he stands out, which Heinsohn says should help him attract a mate.

She, on the other hand, must fiercely defend her hole in the tree, a scarce nesting commodity for these parrots and other species.

"Females may kill each other in disputes over hollows," the scientists report in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

The brilliant coloring comes in handy before nesting.

A female's plumage makes her stand out against leaves. The researchers realized that a competitor's first view of a potential nest tree is typically from above, and that's where a female spend most of her time just prior to breeding, parading her colors to let the others know the tree is taken.

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